The last 5 months have been incredibly discombobulating when it comes to leading a church through a storm. It started out with should we stay open or should we close? Shifted to how do we do stuff online when our building is shut down? Then went to how do we discuss racial division? And now it is do we stay closed, or should we reopen?
What I have learned over the last five months is this: there is no one answer.
As I have interacted with churches across the country in this season, I have begun to appreciate more acutely the differences in the specific contexts that our churches serve. As churches make their decisions, they are taking into account the specific infection rates in their communities, the demographics of their congregation, the political climate of their neighborhoods, and their best understanding of what God is calling their church to do in this season.
There are a ton of factors to balance as a leader in this season... and there is no one answer.
In our current climate, we like to strip the nuance from our communication. We love to be able to make every decision black and white, either/or, right or wrong. It is easy for me, from my home office in Orlando, to look at what is going on in Minnesota, Maine, Maryland, or even in Tampa and say "they're not doing it right" without fully understanding their context. This is why I have begun to shift my thinking on the conversations that I have with churches when it comes to reopening.
Instead of critiquing what a church is doing, I am more interested in how they are doing it. In other words, are they being clear? While I may or may not particularly agree with how John MacArthur and Andy Stanley are moving forward with their reopening timelines (or how they communicated it), what I appreciate about them is that they are being clear about what they are doing, why they are doing it, and the expectations that they have on their congregation (Andy, in particular, has been really good about clearly communicating expectations throughout this season).
The churches that I have seen navigate this season well are the ones who have been intentional about communicating clearly and eliminating ambiguity in their messaging. In other words, they use phrases like "we will," "we expect," or "please do" instead of words like optional, encouraged, or preferred. I recently had a conversation with my friend Brian Dodd about an Atlanta area church that is doing this well. The pastor, in this situation, clearly communicated expectations weeks in advance and led from the front when it came to modeling the expected behaviors.
As your church leadership team wrestles through what the wisest course of action for your congregation is, keep these three things in mind: